WARREN COUNTY, OHIO


'Warren County' is a county located in the state of Ohio, United States. As of 2000, the population was 158,383. The Census estimate for July 1, 2006 was 201,861 making Warren County the second fastest growing county in Ohio and 80th in the United States[3]. Its county seat is Lebanon6. Warren County was erected May 1, 1803 from Hamilton County, and named for Dr. Joseph Warren, a hero of the Revolution who sent Paul Revere on his ride and who died at the Battle of Bunker Hill.[4]

Contents
Geography
Adjacent counties
Boundaries
Lakes and rivers
Demographics
Transportation
Highways
Airports
Communications
Post Offices
Telephone Service
Media
Public libraries
Local government
Cities and villages
Townships
School districts
Other places of Warren County
Government
Politics
Notable natives and residents
Recreation and attractions
Education
Public School Districts
Vocational Schools
Colleges and Universities
Hospitals in Warren County
See also
Historical articles about Warren County
State facilities in Warren County
External links
References

Geography


According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 1,054 km² (407 mi²). 1,035 km² (400 mi²) of it is land and 19 km² (8 mi²) of it (1.84%) is water. The county is a rough square with the sides roughly 20 miles (30 km) long.
Adjacent counties

Beginning in the northwest corner and proceeding clockwise, the following counties border Warren County: Montgomery, Greene, Clinton, Clermont, Hamilton, and Butler.
Boundaries

Warren County was created by the first Ohio General Assembly in the Act of March 24, 1803, which also created Butler and Montgomery Counties. The act defined Warren County as "all that part of the county of Hamilton included within the following bounds, viz.: Beginning at the northeast corner of the county of Clermont, running thence west with the line of said county to the Little Miami; thence up the same with the meanders thereof to the north boundary of the first tier of sections in the second entire range of townships in the Miami Purchase; thence west to the northeast corner of Section No. 7 in the third township of the aforesaid range; thence north to the Great Miami; thence up the same to the middle of the fifth range of townships; thence east to the County line; thence with same south to the place of beginning." Originally this included land now in Clinton County as far east as Wilmington.
Clinton County proved a continuing headache to the legislature. The Ohio Constitution requires that every county have an area of at least four hundred square miles (1,036 km²). Clinton County's boundaries were several times adjusted in an effort to comply with that clause of the constitution. One of them, the Act of January 30, 1815, detached a strip of land from the eastern side to give to Clinton. That would have left Warren under four hundred square miles (1,036 km²), so a portion of Butler County (the part of Franklin Township where Carlisle is now located) was attached to Warren in compensation. The 1815 act was as follows:

★ Section 1--That all that part of the county of Butler lying and being within the first and second fractional townships in the fifth range, and adjoining the south line of Montgomery County, shall be and the same is hereby attached to and made part of the county of Warren.

★ Section 2--That eleven square miles 28 km² of the territory of the county of Warren and extending parallel to the said eastern boundary of Warren County, along the whole length of such eastern boundary from north to south, shall be and the same is hereby attached to and made a part of the county of Clinton."
Except for the sections formed by the Great and Little Miamis, the sides are all straight lines.
Lakes and rivers

The major rivers of the county are the Great Miami River, which flows through the northwest corner of the county in Franklin Township, and the Little Miami River which zig-zags across the county from north to south. There is one sizable lake, the Caesars Creek Reservoir, created by a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dam on Caesars Creek in the northeast part of the county in Massie Township.

Demographics


'Warren County
Population by year
'2000' 158,383
'1990' 113,909
'1980' 99,276
'1970' 84,925
'1960' 65,711
'1950' 38,505
'1940' 29,894
'1930' 27,348
'1920' 25,716
'1910' 24,497
'1900' 25,584
'1890' 25,468
'1880' 28,392
'1870' 26,689
'1860' 26,902
'1850' 25,560
'1840' 23,141
'1830' 21,468
'1820' 17,837
'1810' 9,925

As of the census² of 2000, there were 158,383 people, 55,966 households, and 43,261 families residing in the county. The population density was 153/km² (396/mi²). There were 58,692 housing units at an average density of 57/km² (147/mi²). The racial makeup of the county was 94.66% White, 2.73% Black or African American, 0.18% Native American, 1.26% Asian, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 0.31% from other races, and 0.84% from two or more races. 1.03% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.
There were 55,966 households out of which 39.70% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 66.20% were married couples living together, 8.00% had a female householder with no husband present, and 22.70% were non-families. 18.90% of all households were made up of individuals and 6.40% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.72 and the average family size was 3.12.
In the county, the population was spread out with 27.70% under the age of 18, 7.10% from 18 to 24, 34.00% from 25 to 44, 21.80% from 45 to 64, and 9.40% who are 66 years of age or older. The median age is 35 years. For every 100 females there were 102.60 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 102.40 males.
The median income for a household in the county was $57,952, and the median income for a family was $64,692. Males had a median income of $47,027 versus $30,862 for females. The per capita income for the county was $25,517. About 3.00% of families and 4.20% of the population were below the poverty line, including 4.40% of those under age 18 and 4.70% of those age 65 or over.

Transportation


Highways

Interstates 71 and 75 pass through the county as do U.S. Highway 22/Ohio 3 and U.S. Highway 42. Other major highways through the county are State Routes 28, 48, 63, 73, 122, 123, 132, 350, and 741. Interstate 71 crosses over the Little Miami River at the Jeremiah Morrow Bridge, the tallest bridge in Ohio.
Airports

Warren County has one public airport, designated as Lebanon-Warren County Airport (KI68/I68). The runway is a 4502' x 65'paved and lighted North-South runway (01/19), and parallel taxiway. Navigation and communications equipment includes PAPI, AWOS,Pilot Controlled Lighting, and Unicom. The airport runway, taxiway, and navigation equipment is owned by the County. The county leases a public terminal, but other facilities are owned and operated under contract by a private Fixed base operator. The airport serves general and business aviation, but has no commercial airlines.
There are also three privately owned airports in the county; Waynesville airport, also know as Red Stewart Field (K40I/40I), Caesar's Creek Gliderport, and Brownies Lebanon Airport.

Communications


Post Offices

The following post offices, with ZIP codes, serve Warren County:

Blanchester, 45107

Carlisle, 45005

Cincinnati (Sharonville branch), 45241

Cincinnati (Sycamore branch), 45249

Clarksville, 45113

Dayton (Centerville/Washington Twp. branch), 45458

Franklin, 45005

Harveysburg, 45032

Goshen, 45122

Kings Mills, 45034

Lebanon, 45036

Loveland, 45140

Maineville, 45039

Mason, 45040

Miamisburg, 45342

Middletown, 45044

Monroe, 45050

Morrow, 45152

Oregonia, 45054

South Lebanon, 45065

Springboro,45066

Waynesville, 45068
''Note: This list may be incomplete.''
Telephone Service

There are telephone companies serving Warren County: the United Telephone Company of Ohio, a subsidiary of Sprint Corporation (Utd); the Germantown Independent Telephone Company (Ger); Cincinnati Bell (Cin); Ohio Bell, a subsidiary of SBC Communications (Oh); the Little Miami Telephone Company, a subsidiary of Telephone and Data Systems (LM); and GTE, a subsidiary of Verizon (GTE). Warren County is in the 513 and 937 area codes.
The following exchange areas serve Warren County, listed with the exchange prefixes used and the area code and company serving that exchange.

★ Bellbrook (937-Oh): 310, 661, 848

★ Blanchester (937-GTE): 783

★ Butlerville (513-LM): 877

★ Centerville (937-Oh): 350, 619, 885, 886

★ Clarksville (937-GTE): 289, 501, 574, 577

★ Franklin (937-Oh): 514, 550, 557, 704, 743, 746, 748, 790, 806, 928

★ Germantown (937-Ger): 855

★ Lebanon (513-Utd): 228, 282, 331, 695, 696, 836, 850, 932, 933, 934

★ Little Miami (513-Cin): 239, 248, 274, 334, 340, 444, 453, 575, 576, 583, 600, 677, 683, 697, 707, 716, 722, 774, 831, 833, 965

★ Mason (513-Utd): 336, 339, 398, 459, 492, 573, 622, 754, 229, 234, 701, 770

★ Miamisburg-West Carrollton (937-Oh): 247, 353, 384, 388, 530, 560, 847, 859, 865, 866, 914

★ Middletown (513-Oh): 217, 222, 224, 261, 267, 292, 306, 318, 320, 355, 392, 420 ,422, 423, 424, 425, 433, 435, 464, 465, 571, 594, 649, 705, 727, 783, 804, 849, 890, 915

★ Monroe (513-Oh): 360, 539

★ Morrow (513-Utd): 899

★ South Lebanon (513-Utd): 268, 480, 494

★ Spring Valley (937-Oh): 317, 659, 862

★ Waynesville (513-Utd): 897
Media

''The Middletown Journal'' circulates in Franklin, Springboro, Lebanon, and Turtlecreek Township. ''The Dayton Daily News'', which is printed in Franklin, circulates in the northern part of the county. ''The Cincinnati Enquirer'' circulates through most of the county while the ''Cincinnati Post'' abandoned all distribution in the county in 2004.
Among its weekly papers are ''The Western Star'', the oldest weekly in the state and the oldest newspaper west of the Appalachians published under its original name. It, like the ''Pulse-Journal'' in Mason and the ''Star-Press'' in Springboro, are owned by the parent of the ''Middletown Journal'' and the ''Dayton Daily News'', Cox Communications. Other weeklies include the ''Franklin Chronicle''.
For a time in the mid-1990s, Lebanon was the home of a commercial radio station, WMMA-FM, 97.3, but its owners sold out and the new owners moved the station to Hamilton County. The only radio station in the county is WLMH-FM, a student-run station at Little Miami High School in Hamilton Township.
Warren County is assigned to the Cincinnati television market, but Dayton television stations treat it as part of their market as well.
Public libraries


Franklin-Springboro Public Library

Lebanon Public Library

Mary L. Cook Public Library - Waynesville

Mason Public Library

Salem Township Public Library

Local government


Map of Warren County, Ohio With Municipal and Township Labels

Cities and villages

The following cities and villages are in Warren County. Those primarily in Warren are in bold, the others in italic.

★ ''Blanchester'' (village; also in Clinton)
★ 'Butlerville' (village)
★ 'Carlisle' (city; also in Montgomery)
★ 'Corwin' (village)
★ 'Franklin' (city)
★ 'Harveysburg' (village)
★ 'Lebanon' (city)
★ ''Loveland'' (city; also in Clermont and Hamilton)
★ 'Maineville' (village)

★ 'Mason' (city)
★ ''Middletown'' (city; also in Butler)
★ ''Monroe'' (city; also in Butler)
★ 'Morrow' (village)
★ 'Pleasant Plain' (village)
★ 'Springboro' (city; also in Montgomery)
★ 'South Lebanon' (village)
★ 'Waynesville'(village)

Townships

The following eleven townships make up Warren County:

Clearcreek
Deerfield
Franklin
Hamilton
Harlan
Massie

Salem
Turtlecreek
Union
Washington
Wayne

School districts

There are seventeen school districts having territory in Warren County. Those listed in 'bold' are primarily in Warren, those in ''italics'' are primarily in other counties. The county each district is chiefly located in is 'bolded'.
#''Blanchester City School District'''' (also in Brown, Clermont, and 'Clinton')
#'Carlisle Local School District' (also in Montgomery)
#''Clinton-Massie Local School District'' (also in 'Clinton')
#'Franklin City School District'
#''Goshen Local School District'' (also in Clermont)
#'Kings Local School District'
#'Lebanon City School District'
#'Little Miami Local School District' (also in Clermont)
#''Loveland City School District'' (also in Clermont and 'Hamilton')
#'Mason City School District'
#''Middletown City School District'' (also in 'Butler')
#''Monroe Local School District'' (also in 'Butler')
#''Princeton City School District'' (also in Butler and Hamilton)
#''Spring Valley Local School District'' (also in 'Greene')
#'Springboro Community City School District' (also in Montgomery)
#'Wayne Local School District'
#''Xenia City School District'' (also in 'Greene' and Clinton)

Other places of Warren County


These are all unincorporated places in the county.

Beedles Station
Blackhawk
Blue Ball
Brown's Store
Camargo
Cozzadale
Crosswick
Dallasburg
Dunlevy
Dodds
Edwardsville
Fort Ancient

Five Points
Flat Iron
Fosters
Fredericksburg
Genn Town
Greentree Corner
Hagemans Crossing
Hammel
Hillcrest
Henpeck
Hickory Corner
Hicks

Hopkinsville
Hunter
Kendricksville
Kings Mills
Kirkwood
Landen
Liberty Hall
Level
Lytle
Loveland Park
Mathers Mill
Middleboro

Middletown Junction
Mount Holly
Mounts Station
Murdoch
New Columbia
Oceola
Oregonia
Otterbein
Pekin
Raysville
Red Lion
Roachester

Rossburg
Ridgeville
San Mar Gale
Senior
Scottsville
Snidercrest
Socialville
Stubbs Mill
Twenty Mile Stand
Union Village
Unity
Utica

West Woodville
Windsor
Zoar

Government


''Main article: Ohio county government''

Politics


Warren County is staunchly Republican and has been since the party was established in the 1850s. Since the first presidential election after its founding, 1856, Warren County has supported the Republican candidate for president all but once, the exception being 1964 when Warren County voted for Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson over Barry M. Goldwater. Before the Republican party was formed, Warren County supported the Whigs. Since 1869, Warren County has almost always supported the Republican candidate for Governor of Ohio, the exceptions being in 1924 when it supported Vic Donahey, 1932 (George White), 1952 (Frank Lausche), and 1958 (Michael V. DiSalle). However, excepting DiSalle, each of these four Democrats, who were all victorious statewide, was a conservative Democrat.
In local races, Warren County occasionally elected Democrats. In 1976, two of the three county commission seats were won by Democrats. Until the mid-1990s, Democrats regularly ran for county offices and, while almost always losing, did not do so badly. However, with the massive expansion in population in the 1990s, the county became extremely Republican, so much so the Democrats fail to field any candidates. In the 1996, 2000, and 2004 elections, in which eight county offices were on the ballot, there were no Democratic candidates for any of them. In November 1999, the last Democrat to hold office in Warren County, a member of the Educational Service Center (county school board), lost her seat to a Republican.

Notable natives and residents


Among the famous who have inhabited the county are:

★ Astronaut Neil Armstrong (Turtlecreek Township)

★ Congressman Clarence Brown, Jr. (Franklin)

★ Civil War officer John Chivington

★ Governor Thomas Corwin (Lebanon)

★ Newspaper publisher William Denny (Lebanon)

★ Aviator Clifford B. Harmon (Lebanon)

★ Actor Woody Harrelson (Lebanon)

★ Secretary of State Cordell Hull (attended school in Lebanon)

★ Game-show contestant Michael Larson (Lebanon)

★ Congressman Donald Lukens (Harveysburg)

★ Newspaper publisher William C. McClintock (Lebanon)

★ U.S. Supreme Court justice John McLean (Lebanon)

★ Governor Jeremiah Morrow (Fosters)

★ Football player Anthony Munoz (Deerfield Township)

★ Sports broadcaster Dan Patrick (Mason)

★ Musician Marty Roe (Lebanon)

★ Congressman Thomas Ross

★ Politician Charles Sanders (Waynesville)

★ Spanish-American war soldier Wilson E. Terry (Kings Mills)

★ Civil War general Durbin Ward (Lebanon)

★ Ohio state treasurer Joseph Whitehill

Recreation and attractions



Kings Island: Theme Park

The Beach Water Park: Water park

Great Wolf Lodge: Indoor Water park resort

Lebanon Mason Monroe Railroad: Nostalgic, themed train rides

Fort Ancient: American Indian earthen mounds

Caesar's Creek State Park and Caesar's Creek Lake

Caesar's Creek Pioneer Village

Little Miami Scenic Trail: Scenic bike trail

Lebanon Countryside Trail

The Golden Lamb: Ohio's oldest, continuously operating inn

Western & Southern Financial Group Masters & Women's Open: Professional Tennis Tournaments

La Comedia Dinner Theatre: One of the nation's largest professional dinner theatres

Cincinnati AVP Pro Beach Volleyball Championship Series

Warren County Historical Society Museum

Glendower State Memorial

Lebanon Raceway

Education


Public School Districts


★ Carlisle Local Schools


Carlisle High School, Carlisle (the Indians)

★ Franklin City Schools


Franklin High School, Franklin (the Wildcats)

★ Kings Local School District


★ Kings High School, Kings Mills (the Knights)

★ Lebanon City Schools


Lebanon High School, Lebanon (the Warriors)

★ Little Miami Local Schools


Little Miami High School, Morrow (the Panthers)

★ Mason City School District


William Mason High School, Mason (the Comets)

★ Springboro Community City School District


Springboro High School, Springboro (the Panthers)

★ Wayne Local School District


Waynesville High School, Waynesville (the Spartans)
Vocational Schools


Warren County Career Center
Colleges and Universities

Warren County has no native colleges or universities, but was the original site selected for Miami University which instead located in Oxford, Ohio in 1809. National Normal University, a teachers college, was located in Lebanon from 1855 until 1917 when it closed. Several colleges currently offer classes in Warren County at various locations, including Sinclair Community College of Dayton, the University of Cincinnati, and Wilmington College. Sinclair is constructing a branch campus in the Mason area to open in Fall 2007. The University of Cincinnati owns 389 acres of land[5] at the intersections of I-71 and Wilmington road, but no plans for development on the site have been announced.

Hospitals in Warren County



Atrium Medical Center - Middletown (Opens December 2007, formerly Middletown Regional Hospital)

Bethesda Medical Center at Arrow Springs - Lebanon (Branch of Bethesda North Hospital)

See also


Historical articles about Warren County


Warren County Canal

Cincinnati, Lebanon and Northern Railway

Little Miami Railroad

Middletown and Cincinnati Railroad

Cincinnati, Lebanon and Northern Railway

Registered historic places in Warren County
State facilities in Warren County


Lebanon Correctional Institution

Warren Correctional Institution

Ohio Department of Transportation District 8 headquarters

External links



Official county site

2003 Population estimates

Quick facts - US Census

Warren County Convention & Visitors Bureau

Warren County Historical Society

Series of articles on local history written by Dallas Bogen

Warren County genealogical information

References


1. Ohio County Profiles: Warren County
2. Warren County data (population)
3. http://www.census.gov/popest/counties/CO-EST2006-08.html| U.S. Census Bureau - 100 Fastest Growing U.S. Counties with 10,000 or More Population in 2006: April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2006
4. Warren County data
5. http://www.co.warren.oh.us/auditor/property_search/summary.asp?account_nbr=7202334 Warren county property record


★ Elva R. Adams. ''Warren County Revisited''. Lebanon, Ohio: Warren County Historical Society, 1989.

★ Robert Brenner. ''Maineville, Ohio, History: 100 Years as an Incorporated Town, 1850-1950''. Cincinnati: John S. Swift, 1950.

★ ''The Centennial Atlas of Warren County, Ohio''. Lebanon, Ohio: The Centennial Atlas Association, 1903.

★ Mabel Eldridge and Dudley Bryant. ''Franklin in the Great Miami Valley''. Edited by Harriet E. Foley. Franklin, Ohio: Franklin Area Historical Society, 1982.

★ Harriet E. Foley, editor. ''Carlisle: The Jersey Settlement in Ohio, 1800-1990''. 2nd ed. Carlisle, Ohio?: The Editor, 1990.

Josiah Morrow. ''The History of Warren County, Ohio''. Chicago: W.H. Beers, 1883. (Reprinted several times)

★ ''Ohio Atlas & Gazetteer''. 6th ed. Yarmouth, Maine: DeLorme, 2001. ISBN 0-89933-281-1

★ Thomas D. Schiffer. ''Peters & King: The Birth & Evolution of the Peters Cartridge Co. & the King Powder Co''. Iola, Wisconsin: Krause Publications, 2002. ISBN 0-87349-363-X

★ William E. Smith. ''History of Southwestern Ohio: The Miami Valleys''. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing, 1964. 3 vols.

★ Rose Marie Springman. ''Around Mason, Ohio: A Story''. Mason, Ohio?: The Author, 1982.

★ Warren County Engineer's Office. ''Official Highway Map 2003''. Lebanon, Ohio: The Office, 2003.

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves